Here Are All the TV Shows Coming to Hulu This Week, Including ‘The Most Heretical Last Boss Queen: From Villainess to Savior’
There’s a packed slate of crime dramas, reality competitions, documentaries and even a fan-favorite anime landing over the next few days. Below, you’ll find quick, useful rundowns for each title—who’s in it, what it’s about, and the creators behind it—so you can decide what to queue up first.
Dates below cover Monday, September 22 through Saturday, September 27, and each entry notes the exact day it’s arriving this week. No spoilers—just the essentials on plots, casts, and creative teams.
‘Into the Void’ (2025– )

The eight-episode docuseries digs into pivotal moments and towering figures in heavy metal—episodes chart stories like the life and death of Ozzy Osbourne guitarist Randy Rhoads, the murder of Pantera’s Dimebag Darrell, Judas Priest’s courtroom saga, and the pioneering work of Death’s Chuck Schuldiner. It begins rolling out on Monday, September 22. Creatively, the series takes its name from the Black Sabbath track and blends archival material with new interviews to map how the genre grew and mutated across decades.
Across the season, individual installments spotlight specific artists and scenes to trace influence lines through metal’s subgenres, from classic heavy metal to thrash and death metal. The show’s format is a traditional music-documentary structure—episode-length case files that combine first-person accounts and performance history—designed for viewers who want both context and detail.
‘The Lowdown’ (2025– )

Created by Sterlin Harjo, this Tulsa-set noir follows journalist Lee Raybon (Ethan Hawke) as he investigates a politically explosive death and stumbles into a web of extremists, power brokers, and buried local history. It lands on Wednesday, September 24. Harjo executive produces alongside Garrett Basch and Ethan and Ryan Hawke; the ensemble includes Keith David, Kaniehtiio Horn, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Kyle MacLachlan, Tim Blake Nelson and others.
Stylistically, the show leans into classic noir hallmarks—hard questions, moral gray zones, and a dogged lead—while grounding the mystery in real Tulsa touchpoints. FX produces, and early festival/press buzz has framed it as a character-driven investigation with a strong sense of place. The season debut on Wednesday anchors the week’s mid-point arrivals.
‘Murder in a Small Town’ (2024– )

Based on L.R. Wright’s Karl Alberg novels, this crime drama follows Minneapolis transplant Karl Alberg (Rossif Sutherland), who takes a chief of police post in the coastal town of Gibsons, British Columbia, and keeps finding murders amid the postcard scenery. It arrives Wednesday, September 24. Kristin Kreuk co-stars as librarian Cassandra Lee; the series was developed by Ian Weir and counts Milan Cheylov among executive producers.
Season 1 features guest turns from James Cromwell and others, and was filmed on the Sunshine Coast, with Fox in the U.S. and Global in Canada. The show premiered in 2024 and was renewed in early 2025; the Wednesday drop continues its North American rollout.
‘Doc’ (2025– )

This U.S. medical drama—developed by Barbie Kligman and based on Italy’s ‘Doc – Nelle tue mani’—centers on Dr. Amy Larsen (Molly Parker), who loses eight years of memories after an accident and must relearn both medicine and her life. It’s set for Wednesday, September 24. The ensemble includes Omar Metwally, Jon Ecker, Amirah Vann, Anya Banerjee, Patrick Walker, Charlotte Fountain-Jardim, and Felicity Huffman; executive producers include Kligman, Hank Steinberg, Rebecca Thomas, and Erwin Stoff.
The series adapts the real-life case of Italian physician Pierdante Piccioni as a framework for weekly cases and serialized personal arcs, using Larsen’s retrograde amnesia to revisit relationships and clinical instincts from the ground up. Season details note a 44-minute episode runtime and production by Fox Entertainment and Sony Pictures Television.
‘Zombie House Flipping’ (2016–2025)

The Tampa-focused branch of the home-renovation franchise follows investor and flipper Dolmar Cross and his local team as they take on severely distressed “zombie” homes around the Bay Area. New episodes are set for Thursday, September 25. The broader ‘Zombie House Flipping’ series is produced for A+E, with Tampa episodes highlighting markets in Hillsborough, Pinellas, and Pasco counties.
Episodes track the full flip cycle—acquisition, demo, rebuild, and sale—often featuring collaborators like realtor Samantha Middleton and designer Amanda Areopagita as they navigate budgets, code issues, and resale strategy. Recent seasons document the team’s expansion and behind-the-scenes challenges particular to Gulf Coast properties.
‘Cryptid: The Swamp Beast’ (2014)

This docudrama investigates Louisiana bayou legends—especially the Rougarou—via dramatizations, eyewitness accounts, and expert commentary. It arrives Thursday, September 25. The History original lists executive producers Mark Kadin, Will Ehbrecht, Michael Stiller, and Brian Meere, with cast members including Britt George, Jimmy Lee Jr., James Ricker II, and Rachel G. Whittle.
Episodes blend folklore and reported sightings around swamp country to explore why the monster myth persists; production leans on location shoots and staged re-creations to evoke the region’s ecology and local traditions. The single-season series originally premiered in February 2014.
‘Ozark Law’ (2025– )

A reality series embedded with the Lake Ozark and Osage Beach Police Departments during the region’s massive summer tourism influx, ‘Ozark Law’ chronicles patrols, investigations, and community calls. It’s scheduled for Thursday, September 25. The show has documented how the population surge strains resources and changes the kinds of cases officers encounter.
Season coverage features episodes that aired earlier in 2025 and spotlights day-to-day policing in a lake resort economy, with A&E as network partner and continued episodic drops through the year. Creator attribution has circulated in trade listings tied to the Ozarks television ecosystem.
‘Shark Tank’ (2009– )

The long-running business series features entrepreneurs pitching to “Sharks” like Mark Cuban, Barbara Corcoran, Lori Greiner, Robert Herjavec, Daymond John, and Kevin O’Leary, who weigh investments on the spot. New episodes arrive Thursday, September 25. Created by Mark Burnett, the U.S. show adapts the international ‘Dragons’ Den’ format and is narrated by Phil Crowley.
Across its 15+ years, the series has showcased hundreds of early-stage products and deals, with executive producers including Burnett, Clay Newbill, and Phil Gurin. Its multi-camera format and rigorous Q&A have made it a staple of startup storytelling in mainstream TV.
‘The Floor’ (2024– )

Hosted by Rob Lowe, this large-scale quiz pits 81 contestants on an LED grid in head-to-head category duels, with winners absorbing opponents’ territory until one player remains. It’s on the slate for Thursday, September 25. The format is adapted from a Dutch original, with the American version premiering in January 2024.
Subsequent seasons expanded the concept and scheduling, with network renewals and special-event launches; the game’s core “challenge your neighbor’s category” mechanic is unchanged. Lowe also executive produces; FOX is the originating U.S. network, with next-day streaming availability.
‘The Golden Bachelor’ (2023– )

The senior-focused spin-off of ‘The Bachelor’ features contestants 60 and over, with Jesse Palmer hosting and a format mirroring the flagship franchise. Fresh episodes land Thursday, September 25. Season 2 has been slated for a fall 2025 launch, building on the successful 2023 debut season.
The series’ development dates to early 2020 casting; production ultimately launched in 2023, with the opener becoming one of ABC’s most-streamed unscripted titles on debut. The week’s episode continues the franchise’s prime-time cadence.
’99 to Beat’ (2025– )

Adapted for U.S. television, this elimination game puts 100 players through fast, often physical challenges where the only rule is: don’t finish last. It’s part of Thursday, September 25’s drops. The American edition has been promoted with Ken Jeong and Erin Andrews as hosts.
Each round removes the bottom finisher until a single winner remains; the franchise has also run in the U.K. with a similar design. Social promos and platform hubs outline the U.S. season’s host pair and the show’s quick-hit event structure.
‘Hell’s Kitchen’ (2005– )

Gordon Ramsay’s culinary competition returns with chefs battling through service challenges and eliminations for a head-chef prize. A new episode is on Friday, September 26. The series has run more than 20 seasons, with season 24—subtitled “Battle of the States”—premiering this fall.
Produced in the U.S. since 2005, the show’s format splits contestants into brigades under Ramsay’s supervision before culminating in an individually led finale service. Recent seasons have rotated sous-chefs and included themed twists; season 23 concluded in February 2025.
‘The Most Heretical Last Boss Queen: From Villainess to Savior’ (2023)

The anime adapts Tenichi’s light novels about Pride Royal Ivy, a young princess who regains memories of a past life and vows to rewrite the “villainess” path the game set for her. It’s arriving Friday, September 26. The TV series is animated by OLM (Team Yoshioka), directed by Norio Nitta, scripted by Deko Akao, with character designs by Hitomi Kōno; an English release is licensed by Sentai Filmworks.
The 12-episode season originally aired July–September 2023 on Japanese networks like Tokyo MX and BS11, with main Japanese cast including Ai Fairouz, Maaya Uchida, and Jun’ya Enoki; English voice credits list Karlii Hoch, Adam Gibbs, and others. A second season has been announced.
‘Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test’ (2023– )

Celebrities undergo condensed, high-intensity versions of special-forces selection under the direction of veteran DS staff Rudy Reyes, Mark “Billy” Billingham, Jason Fox, Remi Adeleke and others. It’s included in Friday, September 26’s lineup. The series is adapted from the U.K.’s ‘SAS: Who Dares Wins’ and has filmed seasons in Jordan, New Zealand, Wales and Morocco.
The format removes typical reality-show eliminations and judges; recruits self-withdraw or are medically removed, with the course designed to test resilience and teamwork. Season renewals placed the next cycle on the calendar for late September 2025.
‘Evil Lives Here: The Killer Speaks’ (2023– )

This Investigation Discovery spinoff features interviews with convicted killers alongside family members seeking answers about their crimes. A new episode is slated for Saturday, September 27. The franchise sits alongside ‘Evil Lives Here’ and ‘Shadows of Death,’ with episodes and seasons available across ID’s platforms.
Recent installments have included high-profile cases and first-person accounts aimed at understanding motives and aftermaths; Season 2 highlights included episodes such as “My Father, the Cannibal.” The series launched in October 2023 and has continued with periodic new episodes.
‘Celebrity Wheel of Fortune’ (2021– )

The primetime spin-off features celebrity contestants playing for charity using the classic word-puzzle format. It’s on the schedule for Saturday, September 27. The series debuted in 2021, initially hosted by Pat Sajak and Vanna White, with Sajak concluding his run on the celebrity edition in June 2025; new seasons move forward under updated hosting plans.
Episodes run two complete games per hour, with enhanced prize structures and charity guarantees. The show is produced by Sony Pictures Television, aligning with the long-running syndicated franchise’s gameplay and studio design.
Share which of these you’re most excited to watch this week in the comments!


